Hardness Conversion Table and Converter: HV, HRC, HBW, HRB

An interactive hardness converter plus general reference tables for steels, aluminium, brass and copper, based on ISO 18265 and ASTM E140.

Hardness conversion lets you estimate the equivalent of a hardness value across different scales, for example from Vickers (HV) to Rockwell C (HRC), Brinell (HBW) or Rockwell B (HRB), and to approximate tensile strength. Use the interactive converter below, or the general reference tables. Conversions follow ISO 18265 and ASTM E140 and are material specific, so always pick the correct material family and, when a specification requires a scale, measure on that scale. For the wider context visit the Hardness Testing Academy.

Interactive hardness converter

Enter a value, choose its scale and the material family (steels, aluminium, brass or copper), and get the approximate equivalents on the other scales, including HV, HBW, HRC, HRB, HRA, the superficial Rockwell scales, Knoop and tensile strength.

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Ferrous or non-ferrous: how the tables are organised

The real dividing line in hardness conversion is ferrous versus non-ferrous, not “hard” versus “soft”. Steels and cast irons, whether annealed, normalised, quenched and tempered or fully hardened, all lie on the same ferrous conversion curve. A single table therefore covers the whole range, from a soft annealed steel up to a hard quenched one (roughly HV 80 to HV 1000). What people call a “soft steel” is simply the low end of that same steel table, not a different material.

At the bottom of the steel range the diamond Rockwell C scale (HRC) is no longer applicable below about HRC 20, so the ball Rockwell B scale (HRB) takes over, exactly as it does on soft non-ferrous metals. You can see this where the steels table runs into the mild-steel region:

Vickers HV Brinell HBW (HB30) Rockwell HRC Rockwell HRB Condition
100 97.5 55.6 Mild steel
80 76 29.0 Very soft (annealed) steel

Non-ferrous metals are different. Brass, copper and aluminium are physically distinct, so at the same Vickers hardness they read 20 to 25 HRB points apart (at HV 80, copper is about 12 HRB, aluminium about 30 and brass about 37). They do not sit on a common curve and cannot be averaged into a single table without introducing errors, so each alloy family has its own dedicated table.

That is why this page shows one steels table that already includes mild steel at its lower end, and three separate non-ferrous tables for aluminium, brass and copper.

Steels and cast iron (approximate)

For common unalloyed and low-alloy steels and cast iron, in 5-point Rockwell C steps. For the full resolution and other scales, use the converter above.

Rockwell HRA Rockwell HRC Rockwell HRB Rockwell 30N Brinell HBW (HB30) Vickers HV Tensile (MPa)
85.6 70.0 903 1000
84.0 65.0 82.0 764 842
81.5 60.0 77.7 661 712
78.7 55.0 73.1 571 606 2016
76.2 50.0 69.2 492 524 1716
73.6 45.0 64.4 431 452 1435
71.0 40.0 113.0 60.1 380 397 1261
68.1 35.0 110.1 55.0 330 342 1090
65.4 30.0 106.9 50.2 289 299 948
62.9 25.0 102.6 45.7 258 265 840
60.5 20.0 98.8 41.0 232 236 768
57.9 95.0 209 212 694
54.9 90.0 185 187 627
52.1 85.0 166 168 556
49.1 80.0 149 150 493
47.1 75.0 135 138 443
44.9 70.0 124 127 407
42.3 65.0 114 117 376
39.4 60.0 104 107 340
55.0 96 99 318
50.0 88 92 295
45.0 83 88 279
40.0 80 85 269
35.0 78 82 262
30.0 76 80 256

Non-ferrous metals (approximate)

Non-ferrous metals follow their own conversion relationships, so each alloy family has a dedicated table, in 5-point Rockwell B steps. The Brinell load differs by family (aluminium and copper use HB5, brass uses HB10).

Aluminium alloys

Rockwell HRA Rockwell HRB Rockwell 30T Brinell HBW (HB5) Vickers HV
57.5 95.0 196 206
54.4 90.0 76.1 174 183
51.4 85.0 73.0 157 165
48.7 80.0 69.0 142 150
46.3 75.0 65.8 131 138
44.1 70.0 62.4 121 127
42.1 65.0 59.3 112 118
40.3 60.0 56.5 104 110
38.7 55.0 53.5 98 103
37.3 50.0 51.7 92 97
35.9 45.0 49.9 87 92
34.6 40.0 47.4 82 87
33.5 35.0 45.2 78 82

Brass

Rockwell HRA Rockwell HRB Rockwell 30T Brinell HBW (HB10) Vickers HV
53.9 90.0 75.0 156 180
51.2 85.0 72.0 142 164
48.7 80.0 69.5 131 150
46.4 75.0 66.5 121 138
43.9 70.0 63.0 112 126
41.7 65.0 60.0 103 116
39.5 60.0 56.3 94 107
37.7 55.0 53.0 87 99
36.2 50.0 49.5 82 93
34.7 45.0 46.2 78 87
33.4 40.0 43.0 74 82
32.3 35.0 39.5 70 78
31.3 30.0 36.0 66 74
30.3 25.0 32.3 63 70
29.4 20.0 29.0 62 67
28.4 15.0 25.1 59 64
27.4 10.0 20.0 55 60

Copper

Rockwell HRA Rockwell HRB Rockwell 45T Brinell HBW (HB5) Vickers HV
43.4 65.0 46.6 124
42.0 60.0 41.5 111 117
40.7 55.0 37.1 102 112
39.5 50.0 33.1 94 107
38.4 45.0 28.8 88 102
37.5 40.0 25.5 82 98
36.5 35.0 20.7 76 94
35.7 30.0 16.0 91
34.9 25.0 11.5 88
34.0 20.0 7.1 84
33.2 15.0 2.6 81
32.4 10.0 78

Note: the converter above also gives Rockwell F, E and H and the superficial T scales for non-ferrous metals. HRA values in the lower range are out of standard and indicative only.

Other material groups

Hardness conversion is material specific. For groups not listed above, ISO 18265 and ASTM E140 provide dedicated conversion tables; for exact values consult the standard or, better, measure directly on the required scale.

Material group Where to find the conversion
Unalloyed and low-alloy steels, cast steel Steels table above (per ISO 18265 / ASTM E140)
Cold-worked (work-hardened) steels ISO 18265 / ASTM E140, dedicated table
Tool steels and high-speed steels ISO 18265 / ASTM E140, dedicated table
Austenitic stainless steels ISO 18265 / ASTM E140, dedicated table
Aluminium, brass and copper Non-ferrous tables above

How accurate is a hardness conversion?

A conversion is an estimate, not a measurement. ISO 18265 and ASTM E140 give tables that are statistically valid for specific material families; the further the material drifts from the reference group, the larger the error. Learn how each scale is measured in the Rockwell, Brinell and Vickers guides.

When should you not convert hardness values?

Avoid conversion when a standard or drawing calls out a specific scale, and be especially careful with austenitic stainless steels, surface-hardened or coated parts and dissimilar materials. In these cases, measure directly on the required scale to avoid significant errors.

Frequently asked questions

Can I convert Vickers to Rockwell C?

Yes, approximately, for non-austenitic and low-alloy steels using ISO 18265 and ASTM E140. Use the converter above and select the steels family. Treat the result as an estimate.

Why are there separate tables for steel, aluminium, brass and copper?

Because the relationship between scales depends on the material, and even the Brinell load differs by family. The converter lets you pick the correct family for a reliable estimate.

Is there a separate table for soft steel?

No. Soft and hard steels lie on the same ferrous conversion curve, so a single steels table covers the whole range. A soft (annealed) steel is simply the low end of that table, where the diamond Rockwell C scale stops (below about HRC 20) and the ball Rockwell B scale takes over. The real division is ferrous versus non-ferrous, not soft versus hard.

Why do brass, copper and aluminium each need their own table?

They are physically different materials, so at the same Vickers hardness they read about 20 to 25 Rockwell B points apart. They do not sit on a common curve, so averaging them into one table would give unrepresentative values. Each alloy family therefore has its own dedicated conversion table.

Can hardness predict tensile strength?

For many steels, tensile strength can be roughly estimated from hardness (ISO 18265 includes such tables), but the relationship is material dependent and should be validated for critical applications.

Need certified reference blocks to verify your hardness tester?

See our certified hardness test blocks